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Thalassa

American  
[thuh-las-uh] / θəˈlæs ə /

noun

Classical Mythology.
  1. the personification of the sea.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Near the coast, at a hip new restaurant and beach club called Thalassa, with a tan and white palette suggesting Miami or Mykonos, the wall behind the bar shined bright lights on local gin.

From New York Times • Jan. 28, 2023

By 2 a.m., the party at Thalassa, a waterfront bouzouki club in the exclusive Athens suburb of Glyfada, is finally getting going.

From Time • May 24, 2010

Big clubs like Thalassa used to be open seven nights a week; now they are open only on the weekends.

From Time • May 24, 2010

There is nothing highhanded about Thalassa, a 59-year-old British-born grandmother who finds "relief from the everyday pressures of life by working among living things which refuse to be hurried."

From Time Magazine Archive

He had reached Cornwall safely from London—run the gauntlet of all the watching eyes of the police—and he would not go back without seeing Thalassa.

From The Moon Rock by Rees, Arthur J. (Arthur John)